2. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
Abstract
The sovereign debt crisis in some EU Member States has shown that greater eco-
nomic convergence, the long-term sustainability of public finances and a European
approach to banking regulation and resolution is necessary in order for the eurozone
to become a sustainable currency area. This requires further economic, budgetary,
financial, and thus political, integration of the European Union. However, when EU
governance mechanisms are implemented or strengthened there is a need to reinforce
the democratic legitimacy of institutions and procedures.
In the short term, work should be continued to introduce transnational lists of
candidates for the European Parliament and the standard use of roll call voting; the
biggest political families should declare their candidate for Commission president
before the upcoming elections; and more regular high-level consultation and dialogue
between members of national parliaments and European policymakers on economic,
financial and budgetary policies should take place.
When it comes to long-term reforms, this policy brief puts these proposals up for
debate: attributing the right of initiative to the European Parliament and the Council, in
addition to the Commission; the direct election of the president of the executive, the
European Commission; and having the president of the executive also taking up the
role of president of the European Council. Moreover, the European Parliament should
be more involved in decision-making, particularly on economic policy.
Keywords: Budgetary coordination – Convergence – Democratic deficit – Econo-
mic governance – European elections – European Parliament – Sovereign debt crises
Introduction
This policy brief focuses on the impact that the new steps being taken towards
economic integration will have on the democratic legitimacy and accountability of the
European institutions. It also puts up for debate proposals for tackling what we believe
will be an increased democratic deficit.
2 In order to do this, the brief first lists the current failures within the EU’s economic
governance structure and formulates solutions for these. Next, the current issues
concerning the democratic deficit and its connection to an enhanced economic union
are listed. Finally, we present a series of practical short-term steps and our long-term
view of how to alleviate the democratic deficit.
3. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
The building blocks of an
economic union
Introduction
The current financial and sovereign debt crisis has revealed a lack of economic,
budgetary, financial and political integration in the European Union. On the one hand,
huge discrepancies in the economic and budgetary performance of Member States
have become visible and have caused a huge strain on the euro area. On the other
hand, the management of the crisis has shown the limits of the current financial and
political decision-making processes.
Since the start of the crisis, several initiatives have strengthened the governance of
economic and budgetary policy coordination amongst the EU Member States. In addi-
tion, actions have been implemented to render the political decision-making process
more efficient and effective. Moreover, a new financial supervisory architecture has
been agreed and implemented, and recent decisions are likely to strengthen this archi-
tecture further.2
In what follows, we will briefly highlight what, in our view, is still lacking in the cur-
rent governance framework and will formulate proposals to solve these issues.
`
Identifying the current issues
Convergence
As the Optimal Currency Area (OCA) theory teaches us, a common central bank will
never be able to fix an optimal interest rate if the economic cycles that make up the
currency area diverge considerably.3 During the economic crisis the need for greater
convergence also became visible through the existence of huge, so-called macro-
economic imbalances between the economies of the different Member States. Based
on the OCA theory and these imbalances, the current crisis shows that the euro area
will only be sustainable when the different economies that make up the currency area
converge.
2
Euro Area Summit Statement’, 29 June 2012, accessed at http://consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/
docs/pressdata/en/ec/131359.pdf on 20 July 2012. The Commission’s proposals for a banking union and 3
the ‘two-pack’: European Commission, ‘EU Economic Governance’, website of the European Commission,
accessed at http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/economic_governance/index_en.htm on 21 September
2012; and European Commission, ‘Commission Proposes New ECB Powers for Banking Supervision
as Part of a Banking Union’, website of the European Commission, accessed at http://ec.europa.eu/
commission_2010-2014/barnier/headlines/news/2012/09/20120912_en.htm on 21 September 2012.
3
For an overview of the Optimal Currency Area theory and its implications, we refer to R. Baldwin and C.
Wyplosz, The Economics of European Integration, 3rd ed. (Maidenhead: McGraw-Hill, 2011), ch. 11.
4. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
Debt sustainability
High levels of private and/or public debt reduce an economy’s growth potential and
a company’s and/or government’s ability to absorb economic shocks or to take policy
initiatives (e.g. to invest in infrastructure, education, or research and development).
And as we have witnessed during the financial crisis, private liabilities can quickly
become public debt. Moreover, combined with a lack of competitiveness, high levels
of debt create a dangerous cocktail, as lenders start to doubt the borrower’s ability to
repay the debt. For these reasons, we believe that fiscal discipline should be a guiding
principle in future public policymaking.
Banking regulation
Within the euro area, the main creditors of Member States are financial institutions.
And, as financial markets are interlinked, this has an immediate impact on the credit–
worthiness of financial institutions, and consequently on the states that explicitly or
implicitly deliver guarantees to these creditors. This negative feedback loop creates a
situation where countries, often already facing financial difficulties, are asked to sup-
port weakened banks; a more European approach to control mechanisms, as well as
liabilities, would create a healthier situation.
As we see economic convergence, improved debt sustainability and a European
approach to banking regulation as priorities for a long-term solution to the sovereign
debt crisis, we would advance the following goals in addition to the execution of what
has already been agreed upon (the Integrated Guidelines;4 six-pack;5 Treaty on Stabi-
lity, Coordination and Governance in the Economic and Monetary Union; the EU2020
strategy; the Euro-plus Pact; and the European System of Financial Supervisors).
Towards an economic union
Power to overrule
With over 1% of the EU’s gross domestic product (GDP) in funds to be invested at
EU level (+/- 2% of all public spending in the EU), it is essential that the EU institutions
coordinate their economic and budgetary policies with the Member States. In addition,
4
4
The Integrated Guidelines were decided upon in accordance with Article 121 of the Treaty on the
Functioning of the European Union.
5
Detailed information on the six-pack, the Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance in the Economic
and Monetary Union, EU2020, the Euro-plus Pact and the European System of Financial Supervisors can be
found at http://ec.europa.eu/europe2020/priorities/economic-governance/index_en.htm and http://ec.europa.
eu/internal_market/finances/committees/index_en.htm.
5. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
as the biggest fiscal leverage is to be found at Member State level, the EU’s powers
to coordinate the economic and budgetary policies of the Member States should be
strengthened. It is only when this two-way coordination is enhanced that the needed
economic convergence will occur.
We therefore support the idea of using the European Semester of policy coordina-
tion.6 It is important not only to have a discussion about national economic policies
and budgets based on an EU assessment, but to discuss economic and budgetary
policy coordination between the EU and its Member States, and between Member
States themselves. In practical terms, this means there should be annual coordination
on how to invest, on the one hand, the Union’s budget and, on the other hand, the
national and regional budgets of the EU Member States.7 In addition, the EU and the
Member States should coordinate their main policy initiatives in order for them to meet
the agreed economic and budgetary policy targets.8
However, this discussion should not only be about peer pressure; there should
be real executive power at EU level to overrule decisions that go against the overall
agreed EU economic and budgetary policy (that is, the broad guidelines of the eco-
nomic policies of the Member States and of the Union, as defined in Article 121 of the
Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU)). Thus, there should be fewer
rules, but more effective decision-making authority. One could assign this responsibi-
lity to the European Commission. Its commissioner for economic and monetary affairs
and the euro would be empowered to overrule decisions or, in particularly severe
cases, formulate a proposal to overrule a decision in the Council and the European
Parliament. In legal terms, this necessitates changes and the introduction of new para-
graphs to Article 121 of the TFEU.
Alongside this effective decision-making authority to be installed at EU level, there
should be increasingly severe implications for the governance of the economic and
budgetary policy of those EU Member States which benefit from financial assistance.
When certain agreed policy targets are missed and no corrective action is undertaken,
that is, a breach of contract occurs, the EU institutions should be empowered to over-
6
The current European Semester is a six-month period each year during which Member States’ budgetary,
macro-economic and structural policies are coordinated effectively so as to allow Member States to take
EU considerations into account at an early stage in their national budgetary processes and in other aspects
of economic policymaking. For more information see http://ec.europa.eu/europe2020/priorities/economic-
governance/index_en.htm.
7
Tax revenues as a percentage of GDP represent between 28% (Ireland) and 48.2% of GDP (Denmark) in 5
selected EU Member States (OECD, Tax Revenue as % GDP, accessed at http://www.oecd.org/statistics/
on 12 March 2012).
8
The EU’s economic and budgetary policy is laid down in the Integrated Guidelines, and, within the
framework of the European Semester, more detailed policies have been agreed upon within the Council,
based on the Stability and Growth Pact, the EU2020 Strategy, the Euro-plus Pact, and the Treaty on Stability,
Coordination and Governance in the Economic and Monetary Union.
6. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
rule fundamental elements of the budgetary policy of the Member State. In legal terms,
this necessitates changes to Article 126 of the TFEU, in addition to the changes to
Article 121 outlined above. Changing the treaties requires, at the very least, approval
in all national parliaments of the Member States of the European Union.
An orderly default mechanism and European Debt Certificates
In addition to strengthening coordination to obtain convergence, avoid moral ha-
zard and provide financial assistance to an insolvent country, an orderly default me-
chanism for Member States should be developed. The decision to apply International
Monetary Fund standards in the framework of the private sector’s involvement when
the European Stability Mechanism is activated is a step in the right direction, but more
detailed plans are necessary.9
This orderly default mechanism, in combination with strengthened economic and
budgetary governance, should go hand in hand with the introduction of European Debt
Certificates, as described in an earlier Centre for European Studies’ (CES) policy brief
by Geeroms, Moesen and De Corte, or another mechanism of debt mutualisation.10
Robust financial markets
In addition to these initiatives, financial markets should increase their robustness in
order to cope with an orderly default by a financial institution or a Member State. This
relates not only to capital requirements, but also to the development of a European
banking resolution scheme and a European deposit guarantee scheme.
A truly single market
As a final element, we agree that the accomplishment of the Single Market, which
is far from complete, would be a major driver for economic convergence. A single
labour market, where European citizens can move freely within the Union to those
areas where the chances of employment are highest, does not exist. Nor do we have
a single market in services, where doctors, lawyers and other professionals do not
encounter obstacles to executing their profession in another Member State. Therefore,
we support all initiatives (e.g. the Single Market Act) that contribute to the creation of a
truly single market.
6
9
European Council Decision of 16 and 17 December 2010.
H. Geeroms, W. Moesen and S. De Corte, ‘The EU at a Crossroads: An Action Plan’, Policy Brief, Centre for
10
European Studies (Brussels, 2011), 6, accessed at http://www.thinkingeurope.eu/publications_policybriefs_
bytopic.asp on 20 July 2012.
7. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
Increased powers necessitate increased
politicisation and legitimacy
Introduction
Over the last sixty years the European Union has evolved from a very concrete and
limited form of cooperation (the European Coal and Steel Community, which was,
however, ambitious for its time) to a European Union composed of 27 Member States
(28 in 2013). The world has also changed in the course of these years, with globali-
sation making traditional nation-state structures insufficient for dealing with complex
common challenges. Building on a functionalist logic, which consists of taking small but
safe steps, the EU has slowly but successfully widened and deepened as an econo-
mic and political project. As described in the previous section, economic convergence,
mechanisms to ensure debt sustainability, and a European approach to banking reso-
lutions and regulation are the current inevitable driving forces behind a more integrated
euro area and, taking into account globalisation, a more integrated European Union.
However, as the president of the European Council has already identified in his
report,11 a more integrated Union can only be sustained when mechanisms are put in
place to increase the citizens’ ownership of Europe-wide decisions. In the following
paragraphs we outline the current issues and formulate potential options to close the
widening gap between policymakers and citizens. In this sense, we hope that this po-
licy brief can contribute to the debate on the democratisation of the European Union’s
decision-making processes.
Identifying the current issues
The right of initiative
Under the Treaty of Lisbon and all previous treaties, the European Commission
is the sole institution with the right to initiate legislative proposals. The main reason
for this is that the European Commission, as a completely independent body, is best
placed to represent the Community interest. However, the consequence of this is that
the European Parliament, although it has directly elected members, is unique in that it
has no right of legislative initiative.
7
H. Van Rompuy, ‘Towards a Genuine Economic and Monetary Union’, Report by the President of the
11
European Council (Brussels, 2012), 6, accessed at http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/focuson/crisis/
documents/131201_en.pdf on 15 July 2012.
8. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
Current involvement in decision-making procedures
The Council is currently more often involved in decision-making procedures
related to economic and budgetary policies than the European Parliament. Article
121(2) of the TFEU reads as follows: ‘The Council shall, on a recommendation from
the Commission, formulate a draft for the broad guidelines of the economic policies
of the Member States and of the Union, and shall report its findings to the Euro-
pean Council.’12 When economic policies increasingly become a matter of common
concern, questions should be raised about the involvement of the European Parlia-
ment in these decision-making procedures.
Turnout in European elections
The turnout for the elections of the Members of the European Parliament (MEPs)
has fallen from 62% participation in 1979 to a disappointing 43% in 2009. This de-
creasing interest has paradoxically run in parallel with the progressive increase of the
Parliament’s powers. If fundamental decisions about the economic and budgetary
policies of the EU and its Member States are to be co-decided at the EU level,13 rein-
forcement of the democratic legitimacy of the European institutions through higher
voter turnout represents a major challenge.
The Commission as a ‘completely independent body’
The idea of having a supranational authority that can overrule national decisions
when it comes to economic affairs raises yet another important question: can we
differentiate between economic choices and political ones? This question is particu-
larly relevant when we think of the nature of the European Commission, that is to say,
a ‘completely neutral body’ according to the TFEU.14 We could fairly argue that the
Commission is already de facto political. The actual question then is whether or not
this politicisation should be institutionalised. And, if the politicisation is institutiona-
lised, what will the consequences be for the Commission’s role as the ruling authority
in, for example, competition or single market infringement cases?
The election of the president of the European Council
8 According to the Treaty on European Union (TEU), ‘The European Council shall pro-
vide the Union with the necessary impetus for its development and defining its general
12
Art. 121(2), TFEU.
13
It remains to be seen if this co-decision will take place amongst the members of the euro area or amongst
all members of the European Union.
14
Title I, Art. 17(3), TFEU.
9. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
political directions and priorities’.15 Even if the democratic legitimacy of the European
Council is unquestionable (the heads of state/government are directly elected by citi-
zens or through national parliaments), the election of its president could be more trans-
parent. We must find a way to make people connect with that person whom we ideally
think of as the person to provide impetus and direction to the Union.
Involvement of the national parliaments
In a Union with enhanced economic powers, the exchange of information and coor-
dination between national (be it administrations or parliaments) and European insti-
tutions will be of major importance. While a supranational European authority should
have a wide view of how the European economy is working, national parliaments could
contribute with a more concrete definition of the specific needs of given Member
States.
Our short-term proposals
Ever since the late 1990s, proposals have been made to incrementally reform the
European election process in order to reduce the democratic deficit. In some cases,
the immediate goal was to reverse declining voter turnout at European elections, but
the strategic goal has always been to address legitimacy on a strategic level. Let us
focus on proposals which seem within reach without a major treaty change: the intro-
duction of transnational lists of candidates and the standard use of roll call voting,16
some form of direct election for the Commission president and more frequent dialogue
between national and European parliaments (or their committees).
The introduction of transnational lists and the standard use of roll call voting would,
first of all, politicise the Parliament, in the sense that they would give more weight to
ideological differences at the EU level. The nationality of MEPs, individually as well as
collectively (in terms of national delegations within groups), would thus become less
important in comparison to their ideological and thus ‘Europarty’ identity.
Second, issues being discussed at EU level, including topics that may end up being
painful for some constituencies (such as labour market and services reforms, budgeta-
ry policies and agriculture) ought to be subject to deliberate polarisation between poli-
tical families, instead of being voted on in the European Parliament without individual
MEPs’ voting behaviour being registered and made public.17 This would also have an
9
15
Title I, Art. 15(1), TEU.
16
Roll call voting means that individual MEPs’ votes are registered and made public. As a general rule
Parliament votes by show of hands and only the result of the vote is recorded. The 2009 revision of the
European Parliament’s rules and procedures makes the roll call vote obligatory for the approval of any final
vote on a legislative act.
17
As an example, the individual votes of MEP’s on a resolution of 9 September 2010 regarding the expulsion
of Roma were not registered.
10. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
effect on the habitually huge majorities that are made up of both large political fami-
lies and smaller parties. Citizens would thus feel that the European Parliament actually
deals with controversies, which should increase public interest in and debate about
decision-making on EU policies.
Third, making the election of the president of the Commission, and in our long-term
proposal, the European Council, subject to an EU-wide electoral process, would give
European politics a desperately needed human face. Whether they want to or not,
candidates for Commission president would also have to differentiate the respective
vision of their party family from others in order to increase their profile with the voters.
In 2011, in order to introduce transnational lists of candidates for the European Par-
liament, Andrew Duff MEP (Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe) presented
a report on electoral reform which is still being debated in both the Council and the
Parliament. Duff’s main proposal is to create a truly transnational list of 25 candidates
for the European elections, in addition to the current limit of 751 MEPs. These lists
would be established by the Europarties, and elections would be regulated by a new
EU electoral authority.18
Directly or indirectly electing (instead of appointing) the president of the European
Commission has been debated since the 1980s.19 In the wake of the debate on a 2003
EU constitution, the British sociologist Simon Hix produced one of the most concise and
complete analyses20 of the potential different variants. The options range from universal
direct election by the citizens in parallel with European Parliament elections, to different
models of indirect election by a congress made up of national parliamentarians, often
combined with European ones. In fact, in the wake of the constitutional debate of the
2000s, some steps towards ‘democratising’ the role of Commission president were
taken. The most important of these was the president’s formal election by the European
Parliament,21 although, in reality, this still remains little more than the rubber-stamping
of a choice already made by the Council in its proposal of a candidate. Another step
18
See A. Duff, ‘Draft Report on a Proposal for a Modification of the Act Concerning the Election of the
Members of the European Parliament by Direct Universal Suffrage of 20 September 1976’, Committee on
Constitutional Affairs, accessed at http://www.europarl.europa.eu/meetdocs/2009_2014/documents/afco/
pr/823/823509/823509en.pdf on 15 September 2012.
19
The first proposal stems from 1986; see V. Bogdanor, ‘The Future of the European Community: Two
Models of Democracy’, Government and Opposition 21/2 (1986), 161–76. Further contributions to the debate
are listed in F. Decker and J. Sonnicksen, The Direct Election of the Commission President: A Presidential
10 Approach to Democratising the European Union (Bonn, 2009), 24–5, and F. Decker, ‘Electing the Commission
President and Commissioners Directly: A Proposal’, European View 11/1 (2012), 71–8.
20
See S. Hix, ‘Why the EU Should Have a Single President, and How She Should be Elected’, Paper for the
Working Group on Democracy in the EU, UK Cabinet Office (London, 2002), accessed at http://personal.lse.
ac.uk/hix/Working_Papers/Why%20the%20EU%20Should%20Have%20a%20Single%20President.pdf on
15 September 2012.
21
The new procedure for electing the president of the European Commission is described in Article 17(7) of
the TEU. The new procedure entered into force on 1 December 2009.
11. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
undertaken in this direction is the TFEU stipulation that the choice of the Commission
president ‘take into account the elections of the European Parliament’.22
For 2014, the most clearly discernible immediate step with regard to transnational
lists and direct elections would be to go further in personalising the European Parlia-
ment elections by having the biggest political families, at least, declare their candi-
dates for Commission president before the elections. An additional step would be to
place them at the top of all their national lists in the elections themselves. However,
for the latter proposal to work, a host of political and legal problems would have to be
solved.23 But, whereas in 2009 only the European People’s Party (EPP) group endorsed
a candidate—the incumbent José Manuel Barroso—in 2014 the declaration of just two
presidential candidates before the elections might help to make the campaign more
interesting and personal, and reverse, or at least halt, the downward trend in voter
turnout.
To conclude: in the short term, politicising, polarising and personalising European
elections could lead to higher turnout and better legitimacy for the European Parlia-
ment and the European Commission, which would be an important accompaniment to
the upcoming steps in economic integration.
To increase the exchange of information and coordination between national and Eu-
ropean institutions, policymakers should fully exploit the potential of the Lisbon Treaty.
For example, the first protocol of the Treaty on the role of national parliaments in the
European Union, and more particularly its Title II on interparliamentary cooperation,
should lead to regular, high-level consultation and dialogue between the committee
members of the national parliaments and European policymakers (be they members of
the Council, commissioners or MEPs).
Our long-term proposals
In the long run, which implies major changes to the Lisbon Treaty, the proposal
would be to create a Union with a bicameral system as far as legislative power is
concerned.
The lower chamber would directly represent the European citizens, while the upper
chamber would be the place where Member States could defend their interests. The
European Parliament is the lower chamber. The upper chamber is the Council. Fol-
lowing this reasoning, the EU should also have an executive power, the European
Commission. The European Council should not have executive powers but, following 11
22
Title I, Art. 17(7), TFEU.
Germany, for example, does not have a national list, but 16 Länder-based lists. For a top candidate to run,
23
German electoral law on European Parliament elections would have to be changed.
12. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
its current mandate, should provide the necessary impetus for development and
direction. Finally, as far as judicial power is concerned, the European Court of Justice
would play the role of a ‘constitutional court’, which it actually does already, based on
the principle of the primacy of European law.
So, what is left to be done with regard to the European Parliament? This institution
is the one that has evolved the most throughout the process of European integration.
Beginning life as an Assembly of 78 MPs delegated from national parliaments, it now
is composed of 751 directly elected MEPs. It seems obvious that what remains to be
done in order to finalise the empowerment of the Parliament as a legislator is to en-
large the scope of the Parliament’s involvement in current decision-making processes
(by, for example, including the European Parliament in Article 121(2) of the TFEU) and
to give it the right of legislative initiative.
In order not to upset the institutional balance between the European Parliament and
the Council, we would expect that the Council should also have the right of initiative.
As far as the rotating presidency is concerned, we believe it should remain, but for
administrative purposes, not political ones. In other words, it is not for the Council to
provide the Union with political guidelines or priorities. That is the job of the European
Council and of the European Commission in our long-term view.24
If we want the Commission to play the role of a true executive, we believe that
its president should be, in the long term, directly elected by the citizens of Europe.
This will provide the Union’s executive institution with direct democratic legitimacy,
increase interest in European elections and, moreover, make this institution more
accountable and transparent.
We support the proposal to elect one person to execute the roles of president of
the executive (the European Commission) and president of the institution which should
provide the Union with the impetus for its development and define its general political
directions and priorities (the European Council). This directly elected president would
give the European Union clear leadership and simplify its power structure.
12
24
The Council is a European institution different from the European Council.
13. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
Conclusion
The point of departure of this policy brief is that the eurozone, if it is to become
a sustainable currency area, needs much greater economic convergence, improved
fiscal discipline and a European approach to banking regulation and resolution. To
enable this, this policy brief argues that more economic, budgetary, financial, and thus
political integration of the European Union is necessary. However, when EU gover-
nance mechanisms are implemented or strengthened there is a need to reinforce the
democratic legitimacy of the decision-making institutions and procedures.
In the short term, some immediate steps can be taken to strengthen citizen
ownership. These steps merely aim to politicise and personalise political decision-ma-
king within the European institutions. A more political European Parliament would see
much greater and more outspoken polarisation and debate on controversial political
topics. In return, this policy brief concludes, this would increase the democratic legiti-
macy of the decisions taken. To politicise the decision-making, we have two proposals
that would be feasible in the short term:
• the introduction of transnational lists of candidates for the European Parliament
and the standard use of roll call voting, and
• the indirect election of the president of the European Commission.
For the upcoming elections, an initial step would be for the biggest political families,
at least, to declare their candidate for Commission president before the elections.
Another proposal would be to have a regular high-level dialogue between members
of national parliaments and European policymakers on economic, financial and budge-
tary policies.
In the long term, strengthening the governance mechanisms dealing with economic
and budgetary policies requires a treaty change. We put the following proposals up for
debate:
• a bicameral system with the right of initiative attributed to both the European
Parliament and the Council, in addition to the current right of initiative of
the European Commission;
• the direct election of the president of the executive, the European Commission,
and the president of the European Council;
• that the president of the executive and of the European Council, the institution 13
which should provide the Union with the necessary impetus and general political
direction and priorities, should be the same person; and
• that the Parliament’s involvement in current decision-making processes should
be enlarged, particularly with regard to the broad guidelines of the economic
policies of the EU and its Member States.
14. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
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15. Democracy and Legitimacy in an Economic Union
October 2012
About the authors
Rodrigo Castro Nacarino holds a degree in political science from the Complutense
University of Madrid, as well as a Master’s degree in European studies from the Col-
lege of Europe. He has worked at the Centre for European Studies (CES), collaborating
on several publications, with his research mainly focused on politics and economics in
the EU.
Stefaan De Corte is a senior research officer at the CES, covering social, economic
and financial issues. Before joining the CES, he was an economic policy advisor to the
Belgian minister for foreign affairs and vice-prime minister, and prior to that he was
a policy evaluation consultant. He is a commercial engineer and also has a Master’s
degree in European economics.
Roland Freudenstein studied political science, economics, Japanese studies and
international relations in Bonn and Los Angeles. Having worked as a research fellow
at the German Council on Foreign Relations, he became a member of the foreign and
security planning staff of the European Commission in Brussels in the 1990s. Subse-
quently, he became the director of the Warsaw office of the Konrad Adenauer Founda-
tion and later held a leading role at the Foundation’s central office in Berlin. Since 2008
he has been head of research and deputy director of the CES.
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